97-7959. Abatement Verification  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 61 (Monday, March 31, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 15324-15340]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-7959]
    
    
    
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    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Labor
    
    
    
    
    
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    Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    
    
    
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    29 CFR Part 1903
    
    
    
    Abatement Verifcation; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 61 / Monday, March 31, 1997 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
    
    Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    
    29 CFR Part 1903
    
    [Docket No. C-03]
    RIN 1218-AB40
    
    
    Abatement Verification
    
    AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), 
    Department of Labor.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: OSHA is issuing a final regulation requiring those employers 
    who have received a citation(s) for violation(s) of the Occupational 
    Safety and Health Act (OSH Act or Act) to certify that they have abated 
    the hazardous condition for which they were cited and to inform 
    affected employees of their abatement actions. The abatement procedures 
    a specific employer must follow depend on the nature of the 
    violation(s) identified and the employer's abatement actions. If 
    abatement occurs during or immediately after the inspection that 
    identified the violation(s), the employer is not required to submit an 
    abatement certification letter to OSHA. If the violation(s) is an 
    other-than-serious violation, or a serious violation that does not 
    require additional documentation, the employer is required to certify 
    abatement using a simple one-page form or equivalent. In cases 
    involving the most serious violations, additional documentation is 
    required. The final regulation being published today codifies, 
    simplifies, and streamlines the abatement certification procedures that 
    OSHA has previously enforced administratively. OSHA has determined that 
    this abatement verification regulation will reduce employers' 
    paperwork, enhance employee participation in the abatement process, 
    increase the number of cited hazards that are quickly abated, and 
    streamline and standardize OSHA's abatement procedures.
    
    DATES: This final rule is effective on May 30, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bonnie Friedman, Office of Information 
    and Consumer Affairs, OSHA, Room N-3647, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 
    Constitution Ave., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20210; telephone: (202) 219-
    8148.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A Table of Contents identifying the various 
    portions of this regulatory package follows.
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Background
    II. Summary and Explanation of the Regulation
        Paragraph (a). Scope and application
        Paragraph (b). Definitions
        Paragraph (c). Abatement certification
        Paragraph (d). Abatement documentation
        Paragraph (e). Abatement plans
        Paragraph (f). Progress reports
        Paragraph (g). Employee notification
        Paragraph (h). Transmitting abatement documents
        Paragraph (i). Movable equipment
    III. References
    IV. Pertinent Legal Authority
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    VI. Summary of the Final Economic Analysis
    VII. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    VIII. Environmental Impact Assessment
    IX. Federalism
    X. State Plans
    
    I. Background
    
        Under the OSH Act, 29 U.S.C. 651 et seq., OSHA inspects workplaces 
    to determine whether employers are complying with OSHA standards and 
    other statutory and regulatory requirements. The purpose of OSHA 
    inspections is to identify violative conditions that pose safety and 
    health hazards to employees and to ensure that these conditions are 
    abated. If OSHA determines that a given employer has committed a 
    violation, a citation is issued. The citation references the alleged 
    violation, notes the proposed penalties, and indicates the date by 
    which the violation is to be corrected, i.e., the abatement date (see 
    Section 9(a) of the OSH Act and 29 U.S.C. 658(a)). For each inspection, 
    OSHA opens an employer-specific case file; this case file remains open 
    throughout the inspection process and is not closed until the Agency is 
    satisfied that abatement has occurred.
        OSHA has followed a variety of administrative procedures in the 
    past to ensure that employers abate cited hazards, and has modified 
    these procedures a number of times in the years since the Agency was 
    established. Currently, the cover letter to the employer that 
    accompanies all OSHA citations states that the cited employer must 
    notify the Area Director promptly by letter of completed abatements, as 
    well as provide documentation, such as a photograph or description of 
    the method of abatement, that abatement has occurred. OSHA also 
    frequently conducts follow-up-inspections to verify that abatement has 
    in fact occurred.
        In May 1991, the General Accounting Office (GAO) issued a report 
    (GAO/HRD-91-35) to Congress in which the GAO assessed the adequacy of 
    OSHA's policies and procedures for ensuring the abatement of cited 
    hazards. This report found that OSHA's abatement policies and 
    procedures had limitations that interfered with the Agency's ability to 
    identify those employers who have failed to abate the safety and health 
    hazards for which they had been cited. The GAO also was concerned about 
    hazard abatement problems in the construction industry (e.g., that some 
    construction employers, to avoid abatement, moved cited hazardous 
    equipment to another location, where the uncorrected hazard could 
    continue to pose a risk to unsuspecting employees). The GAO report 
    concluded that OSHA should correct these deficiencies by issuing a 
    regulation that requires employers to provide specific documentation 
    that they have abated cited hazards, including detailed evidence of the 
    corrective actions they have taken to abate such hazards, and prevents 
    employers from circumventing abatement by removing cited movable 
    equipment from the worksite and using it at another worksite.
        Prior to the GAO report, the Agency had made several efforts to 
    strengthen OSHA's abatement verification policies by revising the OSHA 
    Field Operations Manual (FOM) (superseded by the Agency's Field 
    Inspection Reference Manual); the most recent of these revisions was 
    made in 1989. These revisions strengthened OSHA's abatement 
    verification procedures but did little to ensure that these procedures 
    were being applied uniformly across the regulated community.
        The regulation being issued today will address the GAO's concerns 
    while at the same time streamlining and codifying OSHA's procedures for 
    abatement verification. Once this regulation is effective, these 
    procedures will be enforced in a consistent way by all OSHA Area 
    Offices, eliminating inconsistencies and reducing the amount of 
    paperwork employers who receive citations must complete to notify OSHA 
    of their abatement actions. In cases where abatement action can be 
    taken immediately or be completed within 24 hours of the time the 
    Compliance Officer has identified the violation, employers will not be 
    required to certify abatement. In other cases, i.e., those involving 
    other-than-serious and some serious violations, employers are required 
    only to provide OSHA with the information shown in Appendix A or its 
    equivalent. Additional documentation is required only for the most 
    serious violations (e.g., serious violations that the Agency has 
    specifically identified in the citation as requiring documentation and 
    repeat or willful violations.
    
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        Many employers have not been aware that the abatement verification 
    procedures employed by OSHA in the past have been administrative, 
    rather than regulatory, in nature. For example, several commenters in 
    this rulemaking (Exs. 4-22, 4-23, 4-28, and 4-61) were of the opinion 
    that no abatement verification regulation was required because OSHA 
    already has the legal means to verify abatement. These commenters were 
    apparently unaware that, because the Agency's procedures had not been 
    codified, they did not have the force of law.
        OSHA finds that establishing effective abatement verification 
    procedures by regulation will have a number of benefits for employers, 
    employees, and OSHA. This abatement verification regulation will 
    strengthen employee protection by increasing the number of cited 
    hazards abated by employers, reduce employers' paperwork and associated 
    costs, increase employee involvement in the abatement process, 
    streamline the process, and increase the consistency of OSHA's 
    abatement procedures in all areas of the country.
    
    II. Summary and Explanation of the Regulation
    
        This section of the preamble discusses the requirements of the 
    final regulation, describes changes made to the regulation in response 
    to comments received on the proposal, and summarizes the comments 
    received.
    
    Purpose
    
        A paragraph clearly stating the purpose of this regulation has been 
    added to the final rule. This new paragraph describes the intent of 
    OSHA's inspection process and stresses that abatement of violative 
    conditions identified during an OSHA inspection is the overriding goal 
    of that process. The abatement verification regulation establishes the 
    procedures OSHA will follow to ensure that individual employers who 
    have been cited for workplace-specific hazards have abated those 
    hazards. The actions cited employers are required to take to verify 
    abatement, which are set forth in this regulation, are tailored 
    specifically to the nature of the hazard cited and to the employer's 
    abatement actions. That is, the extent of the abatement verification 
    required by OSHA is commensurate with the seriousness of the violation 
    and the actions the employer takes to abate the cited hazard.
    
    Paragraph (a). Scope and Application
    
        The scope of the final regulation has been revised since the 
    proposal to make clear that this section applies only to those 
    individual employers who have received an OSHA citation for a 
    workplace-specific violation of the Occupational Safety and Health Act. 
    Employers who have not been cited are not subject to this regulation. 
    Thus, only those employers for whom OSHA has opened a specific case 
    file are covered by this regulation.
    
    Paragraph (b). Definitions
    
        Paragraph (b) includes definitions for terms used in the final 
    rule. Two proposed definitions have been modified minimally in the 
    final rule to enhance clarity and are not further discussed here. These 
    terms are ``Abatement date'' and ``Final order date.'' In addition, 
    several terms that were defined in the proposal have been deleted from 
    the Definitions paragraph of the final rule because OSHA believes they 
    are self-explanatory. These terms include ``Area Director,'' 
    ``Assistant Secretary,'' and ``Citation item.'' Further, OSHA believes 
    that the meaning of several terms that were defined in the proposal is 
    now clear from the context in which they are used in the regulatory 
    text. These terms include ``Abatement plan,'' ``Commission,'' 
    ``Petition for modification of abatement date (PMA),'' ``PMA final 
    order,'' and ``Progress report.'' However, in response to comments, 
    OSHA has altered some definitions from those proposed and has added 
    others. These changes are discussed further in the following 
    paragraphs.
    Abatement
        OSHA has added ``Abatement'' to the list of definitions included in 
    the final regulation. Abatement is defined as ``action by an employer 
    to comply with a cited standard or regulation or to eliminate a 
    recognized hazard identified by OSHA during an inspection.'' This 
    definition makes clear that OSHA issues citations both for violations 
    of particular standards and for violations of the General Duty Clause 
    (Sec. 5(a)(1) of the Act, 29 USC 654(a)(1)), which requires employers 
    to provide their employees with ``employment and a place of employment 
    which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely 
    to cause death or serious physical harm,'' and that the abatement 
    procedures prescribed by this regulation apply to both types of 
    violations. This definition of abatement is consistent with that used 
    in Chapter IV of OSHA's compliance instruction, CPL 2.103, the Field 
    Inspection Reference Manual (FIRM). Examples of methods commonly used 
    to abate cited hazards include the use of engineering controls (such as 
    local exhaust ventilation) to reduce the exposure of employees to a 
    toxic substance to the levels prescribed by an OSHA standard; 
    correction of a deficiency in a program, such as the respiratory 
    protection program required by 29 CFR 1910.134; or the use of 
    permissible electrical equipment to eliminate a fire hazard.
    Abatement Date
        The final rule defines the abatement date for an uncontested 
    citation as the later of the following dates: the abatement date 
    identified in the citation; the date approved by OSHA or established in 
    litigation as a result of a PMA; or the date established in a citation 
    by an informal settlement agreement. For contested citation items for 
    which the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission has issued a 
    final order, the abatement date is the later of the following dates: 
    the date identified in the final order for abatement; the date computed 
    by adding the period allowed in the citation for abatement to the final 
    order date; or the date established by a formal settlement agreement. 
    OSHA has added this definition to the final rule to provide cited 
    employers with specific information on the meaning of this term as it 
    is used in the final regulation.
    Affected Employees
        ``Affected employees'' is defined to mean ``those employees who are 
    exposed to the hazard(s) identified as violation(s) in a citation.'' 
    This definition has been added to clarify that the term, as used in 
    this regulation, applies specifically to those employees who are put at 
    risk by the safety or health hazard cited by the OSHA Compliance 
    Officer.
        OSHA received one comment (Ex. 4-31) asking that the word 
    ``worksite'' be defined because, according to this commenter, it was 
    used ambiguously in the proposal. Instead of defining this term, 
    however, OSHA has responded to this comment by ensuring that the word 
    ``worksite'' is used unambiguously in the final rule.
    Final Order Date
        The final regulation defines the final order date for uncontested 
    citation items as the 15th working day after the employer receives an 
    OSHA citation. For a contested citation item, the final order date is 
    (A) the 30th day after the date on which a decision or order of a 
    Commission (OSHRC) administrative law judge has been docketed with the 
    Commission unless a member has directed review; or (B) if review has 
    been directed, the 30th day after the
    
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    date on which the Commission decided or issued an order on all or the 
    pertinent part(s) of the case; or (C) the date on which a Federal 
    appeals court issues a decision in a case in which a final order of 
    OSHRC has been stayed. OSHA has added a definition of this term to the 
    final regulation to provide employers with specific information on the 
    meaning of this term in the context of the final rule.
    Movable Equipment
        The final rule defines movable equipment as any hand-held or non-
    hand-held machine or device, whether powered or unpowered, that is used 
    to do work and is moved within or between worksites. This definition 
    has been added to the final rule to clarify the types of equipment to 
    which the requirements of paragraph (i) of the final rule apply.
    
    Paragraph (c). Abatement Certification
    
        Paragraph (c) of the final rule sets forth the requirements 
    employers must follow to certify that they have abated a workplace-
    specific safety or health hazard cited by OSHA. The title of paragraph 
    (c) has been revised from that used in the proposed rule, ``abatement 
    certificate,'' to ``abatement certification'' to emphasize that the 
    requirements of this paragraph relate to the process of abatement 
    certification, rather than to a particular document.
        Many commenters favored changing the Agency's current 
    administratively imposed abatement verification procedures or suggested 
    modifications to the abatement certification paragraph of the proposed 
    rule (Exs. 4-18, 4-32, 4-53, 4-55, and 4-57). These participants 
    recommended that OSHA adopt a ``tiered'' approach to abatement, i.e., 
    one that tailors the extent of the abatement verification required to 
    the seriousness of the hazardous condition cited and the employer's 
    abatement response. The final regulation reflects this approach, and 
    the following paragraphs describe the comments received on the various 
    provisions of paragraph (c) and OSHA's reasoning for including the 
    requirements that appear in the final regulation.
        Paragraph (c)(1) of the final regulation states the obligation of 
    employers who have received a citation to certify to OSHA that they 
    have abated the cited hazardous condition. Certification of abatement 
    must occur within 10 calendar days of the completion of the abatement 
    action, except in those situations addressed by paragraph (c)(2) of the 
    final regulation. The proposed regulation would have allowed employers 
    30 calendar days between the time they abated a cited violation and the 
    time they submitted an abatement certificate to this effect to OSHA. 
    Several commenters (Exs. 4-26, 4-30, 4-50, and 4-72) stated that 30 
    days was too long an interval between completion of abatement and 
    certification of abatement to OSHA. Some of these commenters argued 
    that this interval would delay the OSHA abatement certification review 
    process, while others stated that allowing such a lengthy period of 
    time would mean that exposed employees would not receive timely 
    notification that the hazardous condition to which they had been 
    exposed had been abated. One commenter (Ex. 4-50) stated:
    
        The employer should be required to submit the abatement 
    certificate on, or within a few days after, the abatement date. In 
    this way, employees, who by virtue of the nature of the hazard may 
    not otherwise be privy to knowledge regarding the employer's 
    abatement action, will not be forced to wait thirty days beyond the 
    abatement date to know whether the hazard has been removed and their 
    workplace is safe.
    
    Other commenters (Exs. 4-28 and 4-42), however, argued that 30 days was 
    insufficient time for employers to process certification documents 
    through multiple levels of legal and administrative review.
        In the final regulation, the period between the abatement date and 
    submission of the required abatement information is 10 calendar days, 
    which will ensure that abatement verification is completed in an 
    expeditious manner. OSHA believes that a 10 calendar day period is 
    adequate because the Agency has simplified the abatement process by 
    providing an example of a non-mandatory abatement certification letter 
    in Appendix A. Use of this simplified form, or an equivalent form 
    chosen by the employer that contains the same information, will also 
    facilitate corporate review of the required abatement information.
        Paragraph (c)(2) specifies that employers who abate a hazard 
    identified by an OSHA Compliance Officer immediately, i.e., either 
    during the inspection or within 24 hours of the time the hazard was 
    identified, are not required to certify abatement to OSHA in a separate 
    certification letter. In such cases, however, the Compliance Officer 
    must note in the citation that such immediate abatement has occurred. 
    Paragraph (c)(2) has been added to the final rule in response to 
    comments from rulemaking participants who urged the Agency to eliminate 
    unnecessary paperwork and streamline the process for those employers 
    who choose to abate a cited hazard immediately (defined as during the 
    on-site portion of the inspection, within 24 hours after the violation 
    was identified).
        In the preamble to the proposal, OSHA raised a number of questions, 
    including one (Question 8) that asked for comment on the need for 
    written abatement certification procedures in cases where employers 
    abate hazards immediately. This question elicited more comments than 
    any other. Commenters (Exs. 4-7, 4-9 to 4-23, 4-28, 4-31 to 4-35, 4-39, 
    4-42, 4-47, 4-48, 4-54 to 4-57, 4-59, 4-61, 4-62, 4-64, 4-65, 4-67, 4-
    69, 4-75, 4-77, 4-79, 4-83, 4-84, and 4-85) were unanimous in the 
    opinion that abatement certification and documentation should not be 
    required if immediate abatement of the violation is observed by the 
    OSHA Compliance Officer or occurs shortly thereafter. These 
    participants also stated that the proposed certification requirements, 
    which contained no such exception for immediate abatement, would impose 
    a substantial and unnecessary regulatory burden on employers choosing 
    the immediate abatement approach.
        At the time of the proposal, it was OSHA's practice to require and 
    maintain an extensive abatement ``paper trail'' to ensure that cited 
    violations had been abated. In the meantime, however, in keeping with 
    OSHA's efforts to reduce paperwork, encourage compliance, enhance 
    employee protections, and streamline the process both for OSHA and 
    employers, the Agency has developed a software program to print 
    citations that allows Compliance Officers to record their observation 
    of immediate abatement directly on the citation form. This means that 
    citations now provide a means for OSHA to audit immediate abatements, 
    which makes employer certification of such abatement unnecessary. To 
    ensure that immediate abatements are properly documented, which will 
    also avoid unnecessary follow-up inspections, the Compliance Officer 
    will simply record the immediate abatement on Form OSHA-1B (i.e., will 
    enter the specific citation item and the phrase ``corrected during 
    inspection'' on this form) or its equivalent.
        Paragraph (c)(3) identifies the minimum abatement-related 
    information that employers must include in the abatement certification 
    they submit to the OSHA Area Director. (Additional information, such as 
    the employer's name and address, that must be included is specified in 
    paragraph (h) of this section, along with other details pertaining to 
    the transmittal of abatement information.) The
    
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    information required by paragraph (c)(3) includes, for each cited 
    violation, the date and method of abatement used, and a statement that 
    affected employees and their representatives have been informed of the 
    abatement.
        The abatement certification information required by OSHA is similar 
    to that contained in the corresponding paragraph of the proposal, 
    although the language has been simplified in the final rule. OSHA 
    believes that, in most cases, a brief one-sentence statement describing 
    the action taken to abate a violation (e.g., ``replaced guard on saw'') 
    will be all that is needed in the certification letter.
        The proposal would have required the employer to specify in the 
    abatement certification letter those instances where an abatement had 
    not been completed as planned. The proposal would also have required 
    the employer to submit a subsequent abatement certification letter to 
    OSHA when such a delayed abatement had actually been completed. These 
    requirements do not appear in the final regulation, however, because 
    existing OSHA regulations provide for the employer to file a petition 
    for modification of abatement (PMA) date in cases of delayed abatement. 
    In other words, for cases in which an employer has not abated a 
    violation as planned, the employer's filing of a PMA under 29 CFR 
    1903.14(a) reinitiates the abatement certification process.
        The proposed requirement to include the date on which the employer 
    signed the abatement certification letter is also not included in the 
    final regulation, in response to a recommendation made by a commenter 
    (Ex. 4-61). OSHA determined that this requirement served no useful 
    purpose because the abatement date is already provided in the abatement 
    certification letter, which is signed by the employer.
        One of the questions raised in the preamble to the proposed rule 
    (Question 9) asked whether an Agency-developed sample abatement 
    certification form for employers to use would be useful and 
    specifically asked about the information such a form should contain. 
    Several commenters (Exs. 4-28, 4-39, 4-42, and 4-67) stated that such a 
    form would reduce the compliance burden on employers. The sample 
    abatement certification letter, which is included as non-mandatory 
    Appendix A to the final regulation, was developed in response to these 
    comments. Appendix A is a sample abatement certification letter that is 
    appropriate for certifying both individual or multiple citation items 
    (in the latter case, employers can simply add lines as required). OSHA 
    has developed this abatement certification form, which is non-
    mandatory, specifically to reduce the time and resource burdens for 
    cited employers, which were of concern to several commenters (Exs. 4-9, 
    4-18, 4-19, and 4-48).
    
    Paragraph (d), Abatement Documentation
    
        Paragraph (d), Abatement documentation, specifies the requirements 
    employers must follow to document the completion of abatement for 
    willful or repeat violations and for any serious violation for which 
    the citation indicates that such documentation is required.
        Requiring additional abatement documentation for these more serious 
    violations reflects the tailored approach that many commenters (Exs. 4-
    18, 4-20, 4-24, 4-32, 4-40, 4-43, 4-44, 4-53, 4-55, and 4-57) urged the 
    Agency to take. Such a tiered approach would require only a simple 
    letter certifying abatement for other-than-serious violations and for 
    many serious violations but would require both a certification letter 
    and more extensive documentation for the most serious violations, i.e., 
    willful or repeat violations and those serious violations determined by 
    OSHA on the citation to warrant such documentation.
        Some commenters (Exs. 4-49 and 4-50) recommended that certification 
    and documentation be required for all violations, including other-than-
    serious violations, as has been OSHA's practice in the past. These 
    commenters argued that full certification and documentation were needed 
    in every case to ensure protection to employees exposed to the cited 
    hazards. In contrast, one commenter (Ex. 4-61) stated that abatement 
    documentation should not be required for any violation because 
    requiring employers merely to certify abatement was sufficient.
        In the final regulation, OSHA has adopted a tiered abatement 
    certification approach that is based on the type of violation for which 
    the citation was issued and the employer's abatement actions in 
    response to the citation. The abatement certification process for 
    other-than-serious violations has been streamlined in the final rule as 
    much as possible, while the process for ensuring the abatement of more 
    serious violations is more extensive, as befits the greater complexity 
    and degree of hazard posed to workers by such violations. OSHA's 
    reasoning is discussed below.
        Other-than-serious violations do not expose employees to life 
    threatening or permanently injurious conditions, because they are 
    defined by OSHA as violations that ``cannot reasonably be predicted to 
    cause death or serious physical harm to exposed employees, but [that 
    do] have a direct and immediate relationship to their health and 
    safety.'' (See OSHA Instruction CPL 2.103, Chapter III, p. III-6, 
    September 26, 1994.)
        Although other-than-serious violations are of concern to OSHA, 
    abatement of these violations warrants a lesser commitment of Agency 
    resources than does the abatement of more serious violations. This is 
    particularly the case since other provisions of the final regulation 
    will act to provide additional protections for employees throughout the 
    abatement process. For example, paragraph (g) requires that employers 
    inform affected employees (i.e., those directly affected by the cited 
    hazard) and their representatives of the employer's abatement 
    activities; employees and their representatives must also be given the 
    opportunity to examine and copy all abatement materials prepared by the 
    employer in response to this regulation. These notification 
    requirements will ensure that affected employees are aware of the 
    employer's abatement activities and will also increase the incentives 
    for employers to provide accurate and timely information about their 
    abatement activities. Thus, in adopting a tiered approach to abatement 
    verification, OSHA is making effective use of both Agency and employer 
    resources by placing an appropriate emphasis on the more serious 
    violations. This approach also is consistent with the GAO's 
    recommendations regarding abatement verification for such violations.
        As required by paragraphs (c) and (d), those employers who have 
    received citations for willful or repeat violations, or for 
    specifically identified serious violations, must certify and provide 
    documentary evidence of their abatement actions. Although OSHA retains 
    the discretion to identify any serious cited hazard as one requiring 
    abatement documentation as well as certification, OSHA will generally 
    require such documentation only for ``high-gravity'' serious 
    violations. High-gravity serious violations are those violations that 
    relate to hazards that have a higher level of severity and a higher 
    probability of resulting in employee injury, illness, or death than 
    other serious violations. Examples of high-gravity serious violations 
    are: (1) A storage loft located 10 feet above the work floor is 
    accessed and worked in by employees daily, and the open side of the 
    loft does not have a guard rail. A fall would result in a severe 
    employee injury, and the probability of a fall occurring is great 
    because of the
    
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    frequency of exposure. (2) An electrically powered miter saw is being 
    used daily with the lower blade guard secured in the retracted 
    position. The probability of injury is great due to the frequency of 
    use and the proximity of the employee's hand to the rotating blade. The 
    severity of the resulting injury would undoubtedly be high.
        After a careful review both of the comments received and OSHA's own 
    enforcement experience, OSHA has determined that it is appropriate to 
    require abatement certification for all cited hazardous conditions but 
    to reserve submission of full documentary evidence of abatement for the 
    most serious violations only. Comments (Exs. 4-12 through 4-16, 4-23, 
    4-55) submitted to the record also suggest that a number of other 
    Federal agencies have adopted abatement documentation procedures 
    similar to those being promulgated by OSHA, which increases the 
    Agency's confidence in adopting this approach.
        OSHA retains the discretion, under paragraph (d)(1), to require 
    documentation of abatement for any serious violation that warrants this 
    extra measure of assurance. OSHA must specifically identify in the 
    citation those citation items for which such documentation is required. 
    However, OSHA generally intends to require abatement documentation in 
    low-or medium-gravity serious violation situations only where, in the 
    past 10 years, an employer has received a citation either for a willful 
    or failure-to-abate violation or has a history of compliance violations 
    that resulted in a fatality or in serious physical harm to an employee. 
    OSHA believes that the abatement activities of these employers deserve 
    closer scrutiny and more careful documentation, to ensure that cited 
    hazardous conditions are appropriately abated and to prevent similar 
    occurrences in the future. Before the effective date of this 
    regulation, OSHA will issue a directive to the field specifying the 
    conditions under which the Agency will exercise its discretionary 
    authority to require abatement documentation for serious violations 
    that are not classified as high-gravity.
        Paragraph (d)(2) of the final regulation specifies the types of 
    documentary evidence needed to fulfill the abatement documentation 
    requirements set forth in paragraph (d)(1). Examples of acceptable 
    documentation may include invoices for the purchase of control 
    equipment, bills from repair services, photographs or video evidence of 
    the abated hazard, or other written records. Additional examples of 
    documentary evidence are discussed below.
        In the preamble to the proposal, OSHA asked for comment on the 
    type, sufficiency, and quality of abatement document-ation that should 
    be required. One commenter, the United Steelworkers of America (Ex. 4-
    72), stated that pre-and post-abatement photographs, in addition to 
    other forms of abatement documentation, should be provided by employers 
    to assist the Agency in evaluating abatement. Other commenters (Exs. 4-
    26, 4-47, and 4-53) recommended that the text of the final rule include 
    examples of the types of abatement documentation that would be 
    acceptable.
        In response to these comments, OSHA has included some examples of 
    appropriate abatement documentation in the final regulatory text and 
    has expanded this section of the preamble to provide additional detail. 
    Examples of acceptable documentation could include: photographs of the 
    abated condition (e.g., a machine's point of operation guard in place); 
    an invoice or sales receipt from a manufacturer or supplier of the 
    equipment used to achieve abatement; reports or evaluations by safety 
    and health professionals describing the actions taken to abate the 
    hazard or a report of results of analytical testing; documentation from 
    the manufacturer that the article repaired is within the manufacturer's 
    specifications; a copy of a signed contract for goods and services 
    (e.g., for needed protective equipment, an evaluation by a safety 
    engineer, etc.); records of training completed by employees (if the 
    citation is related to inadequate employee training); a photograph or 
    videotape of the abated condition that identifies the citation number 
    and item number; or a copy of program documents (if the citation 
    relates to a missing or inadequate program, such as a deficiency in the 
    employer's respirator program or hazard communication program).
        As these examples demonstrate, abatement documentation must be 
    objective and describe or portray the abated condition adequately. 
    However, the final regulation does not mandate a particular type of 
    documentary evidence for any specific cited condition; this 
    determination remains the responsibility of the employer, who OSHA 
    believes is in the best position to make this judgment. The 
    acceptability of the abatement documentation will be assessed by OSHA, 
    either during abatement negotiations with the employer or after receipt 
    of the abatement documentation as part of the employer's abatement 
    certification submission. For example, although photographs are listed 
    in the final regulation as an example of abatement documentation, OSHA 
    will not require that photographs, including photographs of pre-and 
    post-abatement conditions, always be used to satisfy this requirement. 
    Whether photographs are appropriate, and the best kinds of photographs, 
    is best determined through discussions between the employer and OSHA, 
    using the information available in the citation and the Agency's 
    knowledge of the employer's workplace and history.
        In summary, OSHA finds that the abatement verification procedures 
    being put in place by this final regulation have several components 
    that will interact to ensure employees a high level of protection from 
    exposure to cited hazards while simultaneously minimizing the amount of 
    paperwork and resources employers (and OSHA) will be required to 
    expend. These components include a tiered system of abatement 
    verification that requires increasing levels of documentation as the 
    seriousness of the violation increases; meaningful employee involvement 
    in all aspects of the abatement process, which will increase the 
    reliability of employer reporting and provide employees with the 
    information they need to protect themselves and their co-workers from 
    exposure to cited hazards; and a simplified and standardized reporting 
    process that allows employers to use various means of submitting 
    abatement information to OSHA.
    
    Paragraph (e). Abatement Plans
    
        Paragraph (e)(1) of the final regulation specifies that OSHA may 
    require employers to submit abatement plans for abatements having dates 
    of 90 days or greater (except for other-than-serious violations). OSHA 
    may require such plans for each cited violation falling in this 
    category and must indicate in the citation which citation items require 
    such plans. These provisions have been changed somewhat since the 
    proposal. For example, the proposed rule would have permitted OSHA to 
    require in the citation that an employer submit a formal plan for the 
    abatement of any safety and health violation for which ``multiple-
    step'' or ``long-term'' abatement was necessary. In the final 
    regulation, the abatement plan requirement applies only to the more 
    serious violations (serious, willful, or repeat violations), and then 
    only to those abatements that have been assigned dates of 90 days or 
    more.
        Paragraph (e)(2) stipulates that employers must submit any 
    abatement
    
    [[Page 15329]]
    
    plan required by OSHA within 25 calendar days of the final order date. 
    Abatement plans must identify the violations and the steps the employer 
    is taking to abate the violation, a schedule for achieving abatement, 
    and, where required by OSHA, the interim measures the employer is 
    taking to protect employees from the hazard represented by the 
    violation until abatement is complete. The requirement to provide 
    interim protections if directed by OSHA to do so has been added to the 
    final rule to be consistent with current Agency practice and to provide 
    employees with appropriate protection in those situations warranting 
    it.
        Several commenters (Exs. 4-28, 4-53, 4-68, 4-77, and 4-79) 
    acknowledged OSHA's need for information on the employer's abatement 
    program in complex and lengthy abatements but were concerned about the 
    administrative burden and cost of formal plans. For example, the 
    Chemical Manufacturers Association (Ex. 4-28) stated:
    
        OSHA accomplishes nothing by requiring detailed abatement plans. 
    The only information OSHA needs in this situation is the actions the 
    employer will take and the dates the actions will be completed. This 
    provides OSHA with the ability to measure whether abatement is being 
    achieved and by the date specified.
    
    Another commenter, United Technologies (Ex. 4-53), interpreted the term 
    ``formal,'' as used in the proposed regulation, to mean ``detailed,'' 
    and recommended that this ``formal/detailed'' requirement be deleted 
    and replaced with a ``written plan outlining the schedule for the 
    implementation of measures to achieve abatement.'' Noting that an 
    abbreviated abatement plan would reduce the paperwork burden on 
    employers, United Technologies stated that ``[t]he 2 hour preparation 
    time in the Proposed Rule's economic modeling [to develop an abatement 
    plan] may underestimate the amount of time necessary to prepare a 
    detailed plan. * * *'' The American Society of Safety Engineers 
    (ASSE)(Ex. 4-68) recommended that an abatement plan consist simply of 
    ``a written outline setting forth an implementation schedule for 
    measures to achieve abatement.'' ASSE stated further that ``[t]he plan 
    need not be `detailed' as long as a schedule exists against which 
    abatement can be measured.''
        Several commenters (Exs. 4-8, 4-22, and 4-79) interpreted the 
    proposed requirement for abatement plans as applying to all violations 
    and indicated their concern with the scope of this requirement. Two 
    commenters (Exs. 4-42 and 4-43) argued that this proposed requirement 
    allowed OSHA too much discretion and would therefore result in 
    inconsistent application of the abatement plan requirement.
        In response to these comments, OSHA has made two important 
    revisions that are reflected in paragraph (e)(1) of the final 
    regulation. First, the requirement now limits the applicability of this 
    provision to abatements of more serious violations that require longer 
    than 90 days to complete. In contrast, the proposed regulation limited 
    abatement plans to multiple-step or long-term abatement situations but 
    did not specify what ``long-term'' meant. In place of the proposed 
    terms ``multi-step'' and ``long-term,'' the final regulation specifies 
    that abatement plans are not required unless the abatement period is 
    longer than 90 calendar days, and then only if required by OSHA.
        OSHA chose 90 days as the appropriate trigger for abatement plans 
    because the Agency's analysis of recent inspection data demonstrated 
    that more than 90 percent of abatements were completed within a 90-day 
    period. After that period, the rate at which abatements were completed 
    slowed significantly, indicating that the types of activities necessary 
    for abatements taking longer than 90 calendar days differed 
    substantially from those needed for abatements of shorter duration 
    (i.e., abatements taking more than 90 calendar days appear to be 
    extremely complex, and may require complicated funding arrangements as 
    well as detailed design and fabrication efforts).
        Even for abatement periods that exceed 90 calendar days, the final 
    regulation provides OSHA with the discretion to decide whether an 
    abatement plan is or is not needed. The Agency believes that Area 
    Directors are in the best position to determine whether such plans are 
    needed because they are most familiar with the employer and the 
    violations described in a citation. The flexibility granted by this 
    requirement will substantially reduce the regulatory burden that would 
    be imposed both on OSHA and employers by a blanket provision requiring 
    plans for all lengthy abatements. At the same time, allowing OSHA 
    discretion to require an abatement plan will ensure that employees are 
    protected in those complex and lengthy abatements where additional 
    information is necessary to ensure satisfactory abatement progress and, 
    if deemed necessary by OSHA, interim employee protection.
        The requirement for abatement plans for complex abatements is 
    consistent with the way OSHA has done business for several years. For 
    example, these plans often are developed jointly by OSHA and the 
    employer, either during an inspection or prior to the time the employer 
    receives a citation; the resulting plans are then incorporated into the 
    citation narrative. Thus, the 90-day requirement will not in any way 
    affect the current negotiation process that occurs between employers 
    and OSHA with regard to abatement plans. This final regulation only 
    specifies the conditions under which abatement plans may be required by 
    OSHA.
        The second important revision made to paragraph (e)(1) since the 
    proposal is the elimination of other-than-serious violations from the 
    requirement for abatement plans. OSHA's analysis of recent inspection 
    data showed that only a few other-than-serious violations required more 
    than 90 calendar days to abate. In view of the small number of other-
    than-serious violations that would be subject to this 90-day 
    requirement and to be consistent with the ``new OSHA'' philosophy of 
    focusing on the more serious hazards, the final regulation applies the 
    abatement plan requirements only to violations classified as serious or 
    above. (See the discussion under ``Abatement certification'' in this 
    preamble.)
        Paragraph (e)(1) also explicitly states that OSHA is responsible 
    for identifying and communicating to the employer which citation items 
    need abatement plans. This provision has been revised only minimally 
    from the parallel requirement in the proposal. Appendix B, which is 
    non-mandatory, is a sample abatement plan that employers may use to 
    report their abatement plans to OSHA. This form also allows several 
    citation items to be combined into a single abatement plan. Employers 
    are free to use any other form to report their abatement progress, 
    providing that the form used contains the same information as that 
    shown in Appendix B.
        Final rule paragraph (e)(2) retains the proposed requirement that 
    any required abatement plan be submitted to OSHA within 25 calendar 
    days after the date of the final order. Several commenters (Exs. 4-10, 
    4-42, and 4-67) stated that the 25-day period was too brief for 
    employers to devise, compile, and obtain managerial approval of 
    abatement plans, especially if they have many violations to correct. On 
    the other hand, one commenter (Ex. 4-72) found the 25-day submission 
    period to be excessive and recommended a 10-day submission period 
    instead.
        OSHA believes that a 10-day submission period would not allow 
    sufficient time for employers to
    
    [[Page 15330]]
    
    investigate abatement methods, develop abatement plan(s), and transmit 
    them (often through corporate channels) to OSHA. However, OSHA believes 
    that the abbreviated format specified for abatement plans in the final 
    regulation makes the 25-day submission period reasonable.
        In the proposal, abatement plans were required to be signed and 
    dated by the employer. However, in the final regulation, OSHA has 
    decided to allow abatement plans to be signed by the employer or the 
    employer's representative and not to require that abatement plans be 
    dated. These revisions make the signature and dating requirements for 
    abatement plans consistent with those for all of the abatement 
    documents required by this regulation (see paragraph (h)).
    
    Paragraph (f). Progress Reports
    
        Paragraph (f) of the final regulation states that employers are 
    required to submit periodic progress reports, in addition to abatement 
    plans, for those more serious hazards requiring long-term abatement 
    (i.e., greater than 90 days) and that OSHA has identified as requiring 
    such a report in the citation. The corresponding provision of the 
    proposal would have allowed OSHA to require progress reports for all 
    ``multi-step'' abatements. This term has been defined in the final 
    regulation to mean abatements requiring 90 calendar days or more to 
    abate. Progress reports are required only for certain abatement plans, 
    and paragraph (f)(1) has been revised to be consistent with paragraph 
    (e)(1), which addresses those plans.
        Paragraph (f)(1) of the final regulation indicates that OSHA must 
    specify in the citation each of the citation items for which a progress 
    report is required and the dates for submission of the initial progress 
    report, which may not be sooner than 30 calendar days after the 
    submission of an abatement plan. These requirements are unchanged from 
    the proposal except that the requirement for OSHA to specify which 
    abatement measures are to be reported has been removed from the final 
    regulation as unnecessary.
        Final rule paragraph (f)(2) requires employers who submit progress 
    reports to include in such reports a brief description (generally only 
    a single-sentence summary) of the action being taken to abate each 
    cited violation and the date the abatement activity was conducted.
        One commenter (Ex. 4-3) stated that OSHA should not require 
    progress reports if an employer abates a cited violation in fewer than 
    30 calendar days after the date of the final order or the date of the 
    PMA final order. This interpretation reflects confusion over the 
    meaning of the requirement for progress reports, and OSHA has responded 
    by clarifying paragraph (f)(1) of the final regulation. The submission 
    date for the first progress report is clearly specified in paragraph 
    (f)(1) in the final regulation as a minimum of 30 or more calendar days 
    after the date on which an abatement plan was submitted to OSHA. If a 
    violation requiring a progress report (or an abatement plan) is abated 
    prior to the submission date, the employer would be required only to 
    submit the abatement certification and abatement documentation 
    information required by the final regulation.
        Citation items may be combined within a single progress report if 
    the citation items being combined have the same abatement actions, 
    proposed completion dates, and actual completion dates, as permitted by 
    the sample progress report form provided in Appendix B to the final 
    regulation. This form, which is non-mandatory, can be used either for 
    individual citation items or for multiple citation items meeting the 
    limitations of the form.
        Like all abatement documents (see paragraph (h) of this section), 
    progress reports must be signed by the employer or his/her authorized 
    representative and include the company name and address, the OSHA 
    inspection number, the citation and citation item numbers, and a 
    statement that the information provided is accurate. The citation and 
    item numbers are needed by OSHA to efficiently collate progress reports 
    with other abatement information sent to OSHA by the employer.
    
    Paragraph (g). Employee Notification
    
        In the proposal, this paragraph was titled ``Posting 
    requirements.'' In the final regulation, it has been designated 
    paragraph (g), ``Employee notification,'' to clarify its purpose, which 
    is to strengthen the abatement verification process by involving 
    employees in all stages of that process. Paragraph (g)(1) requires 
    employers to provide those employees affected by the cited hazardous 
    condition, and their representatives, with information about abatement 
    activities by posting a copy or summary of each document submitted to 
    OSHA near the place where the violation occurred.
        Paragraph (g)(2) specifically recognizes that posting abatement 
    documents or summaries of these documents may not always be an 
    effective way to inform affected employees and their representatives of 
    the employer's abatement activities due to the characteristics of the 
    workplace or the nature of particular jobs. For example, it may be 
    difficult for an employer whose employees work out of their trucks or 
    do not routinely assemble at a central location to communicate the 
    necessary abatement information to these employees by posting. OSHA 
    believes that employers who employ such mobile workers, e.g., 
    arborists, telephone repair personnel, landscape company personnel, 
    salespeople, are in the best position to determine how most effectively 
    to communicate with these employees and their representatives about 
    those abatement activities that affect them. For example, such 
    employers may choose to convey this information in the employee's pay 
    envelope, inside the lid of the work crew's tool box, or in a visible 
    location inside the compartment that contains the cited equipment. 
    Other possible ways of providing employees and their representatives 
    with the required information include discussing the abatement 
    documents with these individuals at a training or tool box session or 
    publishing the information in an employee newsletter or other general 
    communication medium that reaches affected employees and their 
    representatives.
        Affected employees and their representatives also may request 
    copies of all abatement documents for examination and copying. 
    Employers are required by paragraph (g)(3) to inform such employees of 
    this right.
        Paragraph (g)(3)(i) indicates that employees and employee 
    representatives must submit requests to examine and copy abatement 
    documents to the employer within three working days of the time they 
    are notified by the employer that such documents have been submitted to 
    OSHA. The time period permitted for requesting abatement documents is 
    consistent with the citation posting period required in 29 CFR 1903.16. 
    OSHA believes that, since affected employees and their representatives 
    are aware of the cited condition because it directly affects them, 3 
    working days will provide sufficient time for such employees to request 
    abatement documents.
        Paragraph (g)(3)(ii) requires employers to respond to such requests 
    for abatement materials within 5 working days of the receipt of such 
    requests. One commenter (Ex. 4-39) recommended that the regulation be 
    revised to specify the period during which employers must make 
    abatement documents available for examination and copying by employees 
    and their representatives, and the final rule is responsive to this 
    comment. The posting requirement of
    
    [[Page 15331]]
    
    paragraph (g)(1) is also responsive to comments (Exs. 4-19 and 4-21) 
    stating that the proposed requirement, which would have required 
    documents to remain posted until the violation was corrected or for 6 
    days, whichever was later, was too burdensome. As these commenters 
    noted, during extended abatement periods, the documents are likely to 
    deteriorate or to be removed. This would place employers in violation 
    of this paragraph of the final regulation, which requires them to 
    ensure that posted documents will not be altered, defaced, or 
    obstructed.
        Paragraph (g)(4) requires employers to ensure that notice of the 
    availability of abatement documents is provided to employees and their 
    representatives at the same time or before the required abatement 
    information is transmitted to OSHA; that the posted documents are not 
    defaced, covered, or altered so as to be illegible; and that the 
    documents remain posted for three working days after being submitted to 
    OSHA.
        This paragraph of the final rule has been revised in response to 
    comments received on the parallel provisions of the proposal. These 
    changes include revising the language of this requirement to conform as 
    closely as possible with OSHA's existing posting requirements, which 
    are codified at 29 CFR 1903.16, to respond to a comment (Ex. 4-33) 
    about the need to ensure consistency between the requirements of 
    paragraph (g) and those of 29 CFR 1903.16.
        OSHA received one comment on the mobile work operation issue 
    addressed by paragraph (g)(2) of the final regulation. The National 
    Arborist Association (Ex. 4-8) asked OSHA to include examples of 
    alternative posting locations that would satisfy the posting 
    requirement for employers with highly mobile work operations. As the 
    discussion above indicates, OSHA intends to provide employers with a 
    mobile work force with the flexibility to use a wide range of methods 
    to inform employees about abatement activities. Whatever method is 
    chosen, however, must be effective in communicating the required 
    information to employees and their representatives.
        One proposed requirement has not been carried forward in the final 
    regulation. Paragraph (i)(2) of the proposal would have permitted 
    employers to post a notice describing the location at which abatement 
    plans and progress reports could be reviewed if posting these documents 
    was made impractical by their size or magnitude. OSHA believes that 
    this requirement is unnecessary, because the proposed provision would 
    only have referred employees to the location of the required 
    information instead of providing them with the information directly. 
    Additionally, the abatement certification, abatement plan, and progress 
    report provisions of the final regulation have substantially reduced 
    the size and magnitude of these documents, which will make employee 
    notification easier.
        OSHA received two comments (Exs. 4-49 and 4-50) urging the Agency 
    to require employers to distribute abatement documents directly to 
    employee representatives as a means of enhancing the completeness and 
    accuracy of these documents. OSHA is concerned that the voluminous 
    nature of some abatement documentation, e.g., documentary proof of 
    abatement, would make such a requirement unnecessarily burdensome for 
    employers. The approach adopted in the final rule affords the same 
    access, examination, and copying rights to employee representatives as 
    to the affected employees themselves. OSHA believes that requiring 
    employers to post copies of all abatement documents in a readily 
    accessible place, coupled with the final rule's requirement that 
    employers provide employees and their representatives with notice of 
    their right to examine and copy all abatement-related documents, will 
    provide both employees and their representatives with the information 
    they need to keep them fully informed of the employer's abatement 
    activities, as requested by these commenters.
        The proposal specifically identified the Assistant Secretary as a 
    person authorized to examine and copy abatement documents. However, 
    this provision does not appear in the final regulation because, under 
    Section 8 of the OSH Act, the Assistant Secretary already has the 
    authority to review these materials.
    
    Paragraph (h). Transmitting Abatement Documents
    
        Paragraph (g) in the proposal, which specified requirements for 
    transmitting abatement information to OSHA, has been moved to paragraph 
    (h) in the final regulation. This paragraph contains requirements that 
    employers include the following information in all abatement materials 
    submitted to OSHA: The employer's name and address; the inspection 
    number; the citation number and citation item number(s); a statement to 
    the effect that the information provided by the employer is accurate; 
    and the employer's signature or that of his/her authorized 
    representative. These requirements apply to abatement certification 
    letters, abatement documentation, abatement plans, and progress 
    reports, i.e., to all of the abatement verification materials addressed 
    by this regulation. Paragraph (h)(2) specifies that the date of 
    postmark is the date of submission for mailed abatement verification 
    documents. OSHA expects that other means of transmission, such as 
    facsimile transmission, will also be used, if approved by the Area 
    Director in a given case. One commenter (Ex. 4-84) urged OSHA to 
    specifically identify electronic transmission as an approved method in 
    the regulatory text. However, although many methods of transmission are 
    routinely used to provide the Agency with abatement materials, e.g., 
    overnight courier, hand delivery, OSHA does not believe it necessary to 
    specifically list these methods in the regulatory text.
        The proposed rule contained a note to the effect that Agency 
    receipt of documents should not be interpreted as compliance with the 
    regulation's transmittal requirements. Two commenters (Exs. 4-10 and 4-
    69) stated that this note was unnecessary because it merely reminded 
    employers to retain proof that they had submitted abatement 
    certifications and/or documentation, especially in the case of 
    facsimile transmissions. According to these commenters, this is already 
    industry practice. OSHA agrees that the provisions of the final 
    regulation are adequate to notify employers that they are responsible 
    for ensuring that OSHA has received the required abatement information. 
    This note therefore does not appear in the final regulation.
        The proposal contained a paragraph entitled Accuracy of 
    documentation. In the final regulation, OSHA has eliminated this 
    paragraph and simply requires that employers attest to the accuracy of 
    any abatement-related information they submit to OSHA at the time of 
    transmittal. Accurate information is essential to the working of the 
    streamlined abatement process OSHA is putting into place with this 
    final regulation. Based on the Agency's past experience, OSHA believes 
    that the overwhelming majority of employers recognize the importance of 
    accurate abatement information, and that the incentives provided under 
    this final regulation (streamlined process, availability of easy-to-use 
    abatement forms, employee involvement) will encourage full compliance 
    with the regulation's provisions.
        Paragraph (h)(1) of the final regulation requires employers to 
    provide some information that was not specified in the proposal. This 
    information includes the inspection, citation, and citation item 
    numbers. OSHA currently assigns
    
    [[Page 15332]]
    
    each violation a citation and item number that serves as a unique 
    identifier for that inspection. This additional information will 
    benefit both the Agency and employers because it will enable OSHA to 
    distinguish readily between abated and unabated violations, enhance 
    OSHA's ability to retrieve and review abatement materials, and expedite 
    approval of abatement activities. This information will also allow OSHA 
    to determine the appropriateness and completeness of the materials 
    submitted by employers and to identify those needing additional 
    attention.
        In the proposal, abatement certificates were required to be signed 
    by the employer or the employer's duly authorized representative. In 
    the preamble to the proposal, OSHA asked for comments on the 
    appropriate level of management needed to serve as an employer's duly 
    authorized representative in abatement matters. Commenters responding 
    to this question had a wide range of opinions on this issue. Some 
    argued that employers should have complete discretion in this matter 
    (e.g., ``OSHA should leave to each employer's discretion the decision 
    regarding what is the appropriate level of personnel authorized to bind 
    the company by signing the abatement certification'' (Ex. 4-83)), while 
    others recommended that specific personnel be designated for this 
    function (e.g., a corporate officer (Ex. 4-28) or the owner or general 
    manager (Ex. 4-48)). Many commenters recommended that signatory 
    authority be limited to managers who have knowledge of the employer's 
    abatement activities and the authority to commit the employer's 
    resources to these activities (Exs. 4-6, 4-7, 4-23, 4-33, 4-34, 4-54, 
    4-55, 4-56, 4-64, and 4-77). Two commenters supported the language of 
    the proposed requirement, which allowed employers flexibility in 
    designating their representatives (Exs. 4-47 and 4-67).
        The Agency has decided that it would be inappropriate to identify 
    particular management positions or job titles in this requirement 
    because positions and titles vary widely among organizations. 
    Accordingly, the final regulation has made only minor revisions to the 
    proposed language. For example, the word ``duly'' has been removed from 
    the phrase ``authorized representative'' to remove any suggestion that 
    a formal process of designating an authorized representative is 
    required. The language of this provision in the final regulation thus 
    allows employers additional discretion and flexibility in assigning 
    signatory authority for the purpose of abatement certification, which 
    will further expedite the process.
    
    Paragraph (i). Movable Equipment
    
        Paragraph (i) of the final regulation requires employers to alert 
    employees to the presence of cited movable equipment on the worksite 
    either by tagging the equipment's operating controls or the equipment's 
    hazardous components, or affixing a copy of the citation itself to the 
    controls or hazardous components of the cited equipment. In the 
    proposal, this paragraph was designated as paragraph (f), ``Tagging 
    cited equipment.'' This title has been revised in the final regulation 
    to better indicate that this paragraph applies only to movable 
    equipment, as defined in paragraph (b) of this regulation.
        OSHA has included this requirement in the final regulation at least 
    partly in response to the GAO's findings (discussed further in the 
    Background section of this preamble) that, in the past, employers may 
    have been able to circumvent abatement by removing hazardous equipment 
    from the site after it had been cited and then subsequently returning 
    this equipment--without repair--to the site or moving it to another 
    site. Two commenters (Exs. 4-9 and 4-57) stated that the tagging 
    requirements specified in the proposal were unnecessary because these 
    requirements duplicated the provisions of 29 CFR 1910.147 (i.e., OSHA's 
    ``lockout-tagout'' standard). OSHA believes that these commenters have 
    misconstrued the intent of 29 CFR 1910.147's lockout/tagout 
    requirements. The tags of the lockout/tagout standard are intended to 
    alert employees that measures have been taken to control hazardous 
    energy before service or maintenance is performed on the equipment. In 
    contrast, the warning tags required by this regulation are intended to 
    provide warning to employees that a piece of equipment needs to be 
    repaired and poses a serious risk to employees, and to provide such 
    warning even in cases where that equipment is moved to another 
    location, either on or off the worksite where it was first cited.
        The preamble of the proposal asked for comment on the proposed 
    tagging provision. These comments, and OSHA's responses to them, are 
    discussed below. The proposal would have required employers to affix a 
    warning tag to cited equipment on receipt of the citation. OSHA 
    received a number of comments regarding this paragraph. One commenter, 
    the American Feed Industry Association (Ex. 4-19), was concerned about 
    the proposed requirement's lack of specificity. This commenter stated:
    
        The use of warning tags would be inconsistent and confusing. For 
    example, a violation could be cited for not having wheel chocks in 
    place under a parked semi trailer at a loading dock. What should be 
    tagged, the chocks or the trailer? Would the employer keep the 
    chocks tagged until another trailer was parked at the dock? Would an 
    employee not use the chocks on that trailer assuming the chocks 
    themselves may be defective?
    
        Another commenter, the Synthetic Organic Chemical Manufacturers 
    Association, Inc. (Ex. 4-22), argued that the proposed provision was 
    duplicative of OSHA's existing citation posting requirement:
    
        [T]his requirement is superfluous and a paperwork burden. In 
    most cases posting of the citation would alert affected employees 
    that a hazard exists. An additional punitive piece of paper, such as 
    tagging, would not increase employee safety, it would only add to 
    the requirements for abatement.
    
        Two other commenters (Exs. 4-25 and 4-72) expressed support for the 
    provision. The Food & Allied Service Trades (Ex. 4-25) commented, ``To 
    strengthen the intent of this provision, we believe the cited equipment 
    should be incapacitated until the hazard has been abated.'' The United 
    Steelworkers of America (Ex. 4-72) strongly endorsed the tagging 
    provision, noting that:
    
        This [requirement] will help to ensure that workers are fully 
    informed as to [the] hazard[s] they may be exposed to. The posting 
    requirements related to posting the citations at or near where the 
    violations exist have been diluted over the years. It is the 
    exception rather than the rule when citations are posted at or near 
    the violation. Posting these types [of] tags on cited equipment will 
    finally achieve what the drafters of the OSH Act intended, namely to 
    advise workers of unsafe conditions in their work area. (Emphasis in 
    original.)
    
        One commenter, the National Arborist Association (Ex. 4-8), argued 
    that tagging a single piece of equipment that allegedly violates an 
    OSHA safety standard would send a very negative message to users of 
    similar equipment in a firm even if the similar equipment is not cited 
    and is indeed safe to operate. However, OSHA believes that the 
    information presented on the tag (e.g., hazard cited) is sufficient to 
    identify why a given piece of equipment has been cited and to keep 
    employees from generalizing to other equipment.
        In response to these comments, the Agency has made three major 
    revisions to the proposed posting requirements to reduce the regulatory 
    burden associated with compliance, while preserving the protection 
    afforded to employees by these provisions. The first major
    
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    revision made to this paragraph in the final regulation is to state 
    more specifically when the tagging actions by the employer are to occur 
    and to limit the requirement for immediate tagging to hand-held 
    equipment only. A tag must be affixed to other (i.e., non-hand-held) 
    cited movable equipment only if the equipment is actually moved within 
    the worksite at which the equipment was cited, or is moved from that 
    worksite to another worksite before the cited hazards are abated.
        Employers must ensure, in accordance with paragraph (i)(5), that 
    the tag or copy of the citation is not covered by other material and is 
    not altered or defaced so as to be illegible. Paragraph (i)(6) 
    indicates when the warning tag or copy of the citation may be removed; 
    the conditions under which removal may occur include: when abatement 
    has taken place and any abatement documents required by this regulation 
    have been submitted to OSHA, when the cited equipment has been removed 
    permanently from the worksite or is no longer in the employer's 
    control, or when the Commission has vacated the citation.
        The second of these revisions is to except other-than-serious 
    violations from the tagging requirements of the final regulation. As 
    noted above in the discussion of paragraph (c), Abatement 
    certification, violations are characterized as other-than-serious if 
    they do not expose employees to the risk of life-threatening or 
    permanently injurious conditions. Other-than-serious violations also 
    usually require only simple, straightforward corrections that can be 
    accomplished on-site or during short abatement periods. Limiting the 
    applicability of the tagging provision to serious, willful, and repeat 
    violations, and to violative conditions for which the employer has 
    received a failure-to-abate notice, is consistent both with paragraph 
    (c) of the final regulation, which requires abatement documentation 
    only for this group of more serious violations, and with OSHA's 
    emphasis on the most serious hazards.
        OSHA believes that hand-held equipment that has been cited must be 
    tagged promptly because this equipment is easily moved within and 
    between worksites and is frequently used by employees who may not have 
    notice of the cited hazard. In addition, the record did not indicate 
    that there was another reliable and practical method that would meet 
    the employee notification requirement of this provision under these 
    workplace conditions.
        Other equipment (i.e., equipment that is not hand-held) is less 
    readily moved than hand-held equipment and thus is more likely than 
    hand-held equipment to remain at the location described and/or 
    documented in the citation. OSHA believes that, under these conditions 
    (i.e., as long as the cited equipment remains at the location described 
    and/or documented in the citation), the posting requirements of 29 CFR 
    1903.16 will provide employees with adequate notification of the cited 
    hazard. If this equipment is moved within or between worksites, 
    however, employees who have not seen the posted citation in the old 
    location could unknowingly be exposed to the cited hazard in the new 
    location. Affixing a warning tag to the operating controls or the 
    hazardous component(s) of this equipment will ensure that such 
    employees in the new location are properly notified of the violation. 
    Paragraph (i)(3)(ii) of the final regulation requires employers to 
    affix a warning tag to this equipment before it is moved.
        OSHA will be providing non-mandatory warning tags for employers to 
    use to meet the requirements of this paragraph. The Agency believes 
    that doing so will encourage compliance with the tagging requirement 
    and reduce the regulatory burden of this requirement on employers. A 
    note to paragraph (i)(2) of the final regulation specifies that 
    employers may use tags supplied by OSHA for this purpose (see Appendix 
    C). This provision also permits employers to use their own tags to meet 
    this requirement, provided that these tags conform to the design and 
    information specifications of the sample tag displayed in Appendix C; 
    this provision ensures employees that employer-designed tags will 
    protect them at least as effectively as the warning tags supplied by 
    OSHA.
        The last major revision to proposed paragraph (i) permits employers 
    the choice of either posting a copy of the citation or affixing a 
    warning tag directly on the operating controls or the hazardous 
    component of the cited equipment. This change will allow employers 
    additional flexibility and will also satisfy the requirements of 29 CFR 
    1903.16, OSHA's existing posting requirement. The proposal would have 
    required employers both to affix a warning tag to the operating 
    controls or the hazardous component of the cited equipment and to post 
    a copy of the citation ``at or near each place an alleged violation 
    referred to in the citation occurred,'' as required by 29 CFR 1903.16. 
    There are situations, however, where affixing a copy of the citation to 
    hand-held equipment may be difficult or impractical, and in such cases 
    tagging is the only feasible method of providing employees with notice 
    of the violation.
        OSHA received one comment indicating concern about the 
    applicability of the tagging requirements to the construction industry. 
    This commenter (Ex. 4-38) stated that ``[t]he construction industry 
    should not be forced to comply with 29 CFR 1910.145(f)(4) which is not 
    applicable to the construction industry.'' The concerns of this 
    commenter are addressed in paragraph (i)(4) of the final regulation, 
    which states that employers in the construction industry who comply 
    with the design and use requirements for tags specified in paragraphs 
    29 CFR 1926.20(b)(3) and 29 CFR 1926.200(h) of the construction 
    industry standards will be deemed to be in compliance with paragraph 
    (i) of this section if the tag used contains the information required 
    by paragraph (i)(2) of the final regulation. OSHA believes that the 
    addition of paragraph (i)(4) to the final regulation will improve 
    compliance with the requirement among employers in the construction 
    industry because they have extensive experience and familiarity with 
    the design and use requirements for tags that were developed for their 
    industry.
        Paragraph (i)(2) of the final regulation requires tags that are 
    used to comply with the abatement verification regulation's tagging 
    requirements to warn employees about the nature of the violation and 
    identify where the citation has been posted for affected employees to 
    review.
        OSHA received several comments on this provision of the proposal. 
    These commenters (Exs. 4-12, 4-13, 4-14, 4-15, and 4-16) stated that 
    including any information on the warning tag was too burdensome, would 
    endanger employees who read the tag by bringing them within the ambit 
    of the cited hazard, or would discourage employees from operating cited 
    equipment that could be used safely under specific conditions. For 
    example, one commenter (Ex. 4-12) made the following observation:
    
        If OSHA develops a tag (i.e., a ``red'' danger tag) that 
    complies with 29 CFR Sec. 1910.145, which employees understand to 
    mean that equipment to which it was attached is the subject of a 
    violation, the tag need only be recognized for that purpose. The tag 
    should not contain any information, it should merely be identifiable 
    by employees, who can then read the citation on the bulletin board, 
    where citations are generally posted. If employees have to read a 
    tag, which may be attached to moving equipment or equipment being 
    used, employees could be endangered.
    
        However, OSHA does not share this view, because for employees to 
    have the
    
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    information they need to protect themselves and their co-workers from 
    cited equipment hazards, the warning tag must identify the specific 
    equipment cited, state that a citation has been issued by OSHA, and 
    specify where the citation is posted for employee review. This minimal 
    amount of information will alert employees to the hazard and allow them 
    to confirm which equipment (or component) has been cited. Identifying 
    the location of the posted citation will permit employees to find and 
    review the citation for more specific and detailed information about 
    the violation. The Agency does believe, however, that a brief 
    description of the violation is all that is needed on the tag (e.g., 
    ``no guard for blade'').
        The proposed rule contained a paragraph stating that employers who 
    fail to comply with the requirements of this abatement verification 
    regulation will be subject to citation and penalties under the OSH Act. 
    This provision has not been included in the final regulation, in 
    response to comments on this issue (Exs. 4-6, 4-25, 4-29, 4-33, 4-63). 
    For example, the American Forest & Paper Association (Ex. 4-29) 
    recommended that this paragraph not be included in the final regulation 
    because this information was communicated adequately in the preamble. 
    Another commenter (Ex. 4-33) stated that this paragraph should not be 
    included in the final regulation because the regulated community 
    already understands that OSHA has statutory authority to impose 
    penalties on employers who violate OSHA standards and regulations and 
    thus that describing this authority was unnecessary. OSHA agrees with 
    these commenters, and this provision is not included in the final 
    regulation.
        As previously described, OSHA has included in the final regulation 
    three non-mandatory appendices (A, B, and C) to assist employers in 
    complying with this regulation. These appendices were the direct result 
    of numerous favorable comments received to a question raised in the 
    proposal asking whether or not OSHA should develop sample abatement 
    certification forms. By supplying employers with samples of most of the 
    documents this regulation requires, OSHA is reducing burdens on 
    employers, facilitating compliance, and, in turn, enhancing employee 
    protection.
    
    III. References
    
        Government Accounting Office (1991). OSHA Policy Changes Needed to 
    Confirm That Employers Abate Serious Hazards. GAO/HRD-91-35, Report to 
    Congressional Requesters, May 1991.
        OSHA Instruction CPL 2.45B, June 15, 1989, and associated revisions 
    (CH-1 through CH-5 dated March 3, 1995), Field Operations Manual (FOM).
        OSHA Instruction CPL 2.103, September 26, 1994, Field Inspection 
    Reference Manual (FIRM).
    
    IV. Pertinent Legal Authority
    
        This final regulation is authorized by Sections 8(c)(1), 8(g)(2), 
    and 9(b) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (the Act), 
    29 U.S.C. 657 and 658. Under Section 8(c)(1) ``[e]ach employer shall 
    make, keep and preserve, and make available to the Secretary or the 
    Secretary of Health [and Human Services] * * *, such records regarding 
    his activities relating to this Act as the Secretary, in cooperation 
    with the Secretary of Health [and Human Services] * * *, may prescribe 
    by regulation as necessary or appropriate for the enforcement of this 
    Act or for developing information regarding the causes and prevention 
    of occupational accidents and illnesses.'' Additionally, pursuant to 
    Section 8(c)(1), the Secretary has authority to issue regulations 
    requiring employers to keep their employees informed of the employers' 
    responsibilities under the Act. Section 8(g)(2) empowers the Secretary 
    of Labor to ``prescribe such rules and regulations as he may deem 
    necessary to carry out [his] responsibilities under this Act.'' Section 
    9(b) authorizes the Secretary to promulgate regulations associated with 
    the posting of citations.
        The Agency's responsibilities under the Act are defined largely by 
    the enumerated purposes, including: Providing for appropriate reporting 
    procedures that will help achieve the objectives of this Act and 
    accurately describe the nature of the occupational safety and health 
    problem (29 U.S.C. 651(b)(12)); developing innovative methods, 
    techniques, and approaches for dealing with occupational safety and 
    health problems (29 U.S.C. 651(b)(5)); and providing an effective 
    enforcement program (29 U.S.C. 651(b)(10)).
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Assistant Secretary 
    asserts that this final regulation is necessary and appropriate to 
    conduct enforcement responsibilities under the Act, to develop 
    information about the prevention of occupational accidents and 
    illnesses, and to inform employees of their protections and obligations 
    under the Act.
    
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        The final rule does not contain a collection of information within 
    the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA''). The PRA applies 
    to collections of information that establish ``identical'' 
    recordkeeping or reporting requirements applicable to ten or more 
    persons. The Act exempts information obtained ``during the conduct of * 
    * * an administrative action or investigation involving an agency 
    against specific individuals or entities * * *'' 44 U.S.C. 
    3518(c)(1)(B)(ii). In addition, ``information'' does not include simple 
    certifications.
        The final rule addresses OSHA's investigation procedures for 
    assuring abatement in specific cases, i.e., those where a case file is 
    open for the conduct of an inspection of safety and health conditions 
    in the particular employer's workplace and where specific violations 
    are found. The purpose of an OSHA inspection or administrative action 
    is to protect employees by achieving abatement of the hazards 
    identified at the workplace. This purpose is not fulfilled, and the 
    case file is not closed, until OSHA is satisfied that abatement has in 
    fact occurred. The hazards cited and the abatement measures undertaken 
    are specific to the equipment, workplace configuration, and other 
    characteristics of a given workplace and the work operations conducted 
    at that site.
        OSHA has tailored the requirements of the final rule to the 
    seriousness of the particular cited hazard, the time that will be 
    needed for abatement, and the response the employer has taken toward 
    abating the hazard. If the employer abates the hazard during inspection 
    or within 24 hours thereafter, no abatement certification is required. 
    Further, if the cited condition involves an other-than-serious 
    violation or where the circumstances otherwise make it appropriate, 
    only a certification of abatement is required. Only in individual cases 
    where more serious hazards are encountered (e.g., violative conditions 
    resulting in a willful or repeat citation or in a serious citation 
    which the Agency specifically identifies as requiring additional 
    evidence) does the final rule require a cited employer to submit 
    additional proof of abatement. The documentation submitted will vary 
    with the individual circumstances of the case.
        The determination that this final rule is not within the coverage 
    of the Paperwork Reduction Act has been made by OSHA after careful 
    review of the Act, its legislative history, the implementing 
    regulations (5 CFR Part 1320), and OMB's 1989 ``Information Collection 
    Handbook.'' This determination is consistent with OSHA's traditional 
    practice. As discussed above, OSHA's field offices have traditionally 
    collected from employers evidence that cited violations have been 
    abated, and these
    
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    submissions have not been treated as subject to the Paperwork Reduction 
    Act. OSHA notes, however, that at the time the proposed rule was 
    published in 1994, the Agency submitted a request for clearance of the 
    rule under the PRA to OMB and invited public comment on the request. 
    OSHA has now determined that the final rule does not contain a 
    collection of information within the meaning and scope of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995.
    
    VI. Summary of the Economic Analysis of the Final Abatement 
    Verification Rule
    
        Under Executive Order (EO) 12866, OSHA is required to conduct an 
    economic analysis of the costs, benefits, and economic impacts of major 
    rules promulgated by the Agency. There are several criteria for 
    determining which rules are major, as defined by the EO. The final 
    abatement verification rule does not meet any of the criteria for a 
    major rule. However, to provide employers, employees, and other 
    interested parties with information on the data and reasoning relied on 
    by the Agency, OSHA has analyzed the economic impacts of this rule. The 
    complete Final Economic Analysis is available in the docket for this 
    rulemaking [Docket C-03].
        The final abatement verification regulation requires employers who 
    have been cited for violations of the Occupational Safety and Health 
    Act to certify that they have abated the hazardous condition for which 
    they were cited, to document the methods they have used to abate the 
    hazard, and to notify those employees who were exposed to the hazard of 
    the abatement actions they have taken. In most cases, employers will be 
    able to certify abatement using a simple one-page form letter supplied 
    by OSHA. In cases involving more serious violations, additional 
    abatement documentation is required.
        OSHA has required employers to provide evidence of abatement for 
    cited hazardous conditions for more than 20 years, following the 
    procedures for abatement verification set forth in the Field Operations 
    Manual and its successor publication, the Field Inspection Reference 
    Manual. When employers did not provide the requested information, or 
    provided insufficient information, the Agency wrote or phoned employers 
    to prompt them to supply the requested information. If necessary, the 
    Agency contacted employers repeatedly or made follow-up inspections to 
    ensure that the cited violations had been abated. These dunning efforts 
    are unnecessarily resource-intensive for both the Agency and cited 
    employers. Employers who have in the past ignored Federal and State-
    plan agency requests for verification that abatement has taken place 
    will now be required to provide these materials or risk being cited by 
    OSHA.
        The final regulation reduces the burden on cited employers by 
    generally requiring less abatement information than before and by 
    providing simple forms to assist employers to comply. (Employers may 
    also use forms of their own design that contain the same information.)
        Several significant revisions made to the regulation since the 
    proposal have reduced the costs employers will incur to comply. For 
    example, under the final regulation:
         Violations that are immediately abated require no 
    abatement certification.
         For other-than-serious violations, and for most serious 
    violations, only a simple abatement letter is required to verify 
    abatement (a sample format for this letter is provided by OSHA). 
    Overall, OSHA estimates that 90 percent of all violations will require 
    only a simple letter certifying that abatement has occurred.
         Employers are required to provide additional documentation 
    (proof) of abatement only for the more serious violations. The Agency 
    estimates that no more than sixteen percent of all serious violations 
    will require such additional documentation.
         Abatement plans, when required, will generally be simple, 
    one-page documents (see Appendix B).
         Progress reports, when required, have been simplified to 
    require only a single-sentence description of the interim actions 
    taken. OSHA is also providing a sample form for abatement plans and 
    progress reports.
         For employers who have movable equipment that has been 
    cited as a serious hazard by OSHA, the final regulation allows 
    employers either to post a copy of the citation on the cited equipment 
    or to attach a warning tag, supplied by OSHA or devised by the 
    employer, to this equipment to alert affected employees to the presence 
    of the hazard.
    
    Summary of the Costs and Benefits of the Final Regulation
    
        In most cases, OSHA estimates that the final regulation will reduce 
    the costs that cited employers currently incur to verify abatement. 
    This conclusion is based primarily on the fact that the final 
    regulation will only affect those employers who are actually cited for 
    violations (i.e., about two-thirds of inspected employers currently) 
    and on evidence that most of these cited employers already supply 
    Federal and State-plan enforcement agencies with more information on 
    abatement than will be required under the final regulation. Overall, 
    the cost of compliance for employers to verify abatement is estimated 
    to be $2 million less per year than employers are currently incurring 
    (estimated to be $4.4 million) to comply with OSHA's administrative 
    procedures for abatement verification.
        The Agency estimates that the final abatement verification 
    regulation will save employers an additional $4 million annually 
    because they will no longer expend their time and money to respond to 
    dunning efforts to ensure that abatement has taken place. The final 
    rule's net benefits, or cost savings, for employers are estimated to be 
    $6 million annually: a $2 million savings in reduced paperwork to 
    complete abatement verification forms and a $4 million savings in 
    reduced personnel time and effort to respond to OSHA phone and mail 
    inquiries about the status of abatement. In addition, the Agency 
    estimates that Federal and State-plan agencies will experience resource 
    savings of $4.5 million annually under the final regulation (i.e., will 
    save this amount in personnel costs formerly expended in dunning 
    activity and follow-up inspections). Other benefits of the final 
    regulation include enhanced worker protection because hazards will be 
    abated more quickly, and greater employee awareness of, and 
    participation in, the employer's abatement activities.
        For a complete discussion of the methodology used to develop the 
    costs of compliance, cost savings, and net benefits of the final 
    abatement verification regulation, see the Final Economic Analysis in 
    the docket for this rulemaking.
    
    VII. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    
        As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et 
    seq., OSHA has performed a screening analysis to identify any 
    significant economic impacts of the final regulation on a substantial 
    number of small businesses. At the time of the proposal, OSHA's 
    Preliminary Regulatory Impact Assessment specifically stated that the 
    regulation would not have such impacts. OSHA received no comments on 
    this conclusion or the methodology used to reach that determination. 
    Accordingly, the Agency certifies that the final regulation will not 
    have a significant impact on a substantial
    
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    number of small businesses, defined for the purpose of this regulation 
    as those with fewer than 20 employees.
        As discussed in Section VI of this preamble, the final regulation 
    will reduce the costs small establishments currently incur to comply 
    with OSHA's procedural requirements for abatement verification. The 
    cost of the final regulation for employers in those small 
    establishments that receive OSHA citations, including those for small 
    governmental entities regulated under State-plan programs, is well 
    below any measure of significant economic impact. The Agency therefore 
    concludes that this regulation will not have a significant impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities.
    
    VIII. Environmental Impact Assessment
    
    Finding of No Significant Impact
    
        This final regulation has been reviewed in accordance with the 
    requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969 
    (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), the regulations of the Council on 
    Environmental Quality (CEQ) (40 CFR Part 1500), and the Department of 
    Labor's NEPA procedures (29 CFR Part 11). Because the regulation 
    exclusively addresses reporting requirements, it will not have an 
    impact on the environment or result in the release of materials that 
    contaminate natural resources or the environment.
    
    IX. Federalism
    
        The final regulation has been reviewed in accordance with Executive 
    Order 12612 (52 FR 41685), regarding Federalism. This Order requires 
    that agencies, to the extent possible, refrain from limiting state 
    policy options, consult with States prior to taking any actions that 
    would restrict state policy options, and take such actions only if 
    clear constitutional authority exists and the problem is of national 
    scope. The Order provides for preemption of State law only if a clear 
    Congressional intent has been expressed for the Agency to do so. Any 
    such preemption is to be limited to the extent possible.
        With respect to states that do not have OSHA-approved occupational 
    safety and health State plans, the final regulation conforms to the 
    preemption provisions of Section 18 of the OSH Act (29 U.S.C. 667); 
    this section preempts State promulgation and enforcement of 
    requirements dealing with occupational safety and health issues covered 
    by Federal OSHA standards unless the state has an OSHA-approved Sate 
    plan. (See Gade v. National Solid Wastes Management Association, 112 
    S.Ct. 2374 (1992).) Since states without State plans are prohibited 
    already from issuing citations for violations of requirements covered 
    by Federal OSHA standards, this final regulation does not expand this 
    limitation.
        The Agency certifies that this final regulation has been assessed 
    in accordance with the principles, criteria, and requirements set forth 
    under Sections 2 through 5 of Executive Order 12612. Section 18(c)(2) 
    of the OSH Act (29 U.S.C. 667(c)((2)) provides that an OSHA-approved 
    State plan must provide for the development and enforcement of safety 
    and health standards that are, or will be, at least as effective as the 
    Federal program. In implementing this requirement, 29 CFR 1902.3(d)(1) 
    requires a State plan to establish a program for the enforcement of 
    state standards that is, or will be, at least as effective as the 
    standard provided under the OSH Act, and provide assurances that the 
    State plan enforcement program will continue to be at least as 
    effective as the Federal program. Furthermore, 29 CFR 1902.4(a) 
    requires state plans to establish the same procedures and rules that 
    are established by Federal OSHA, or alternative procedures and rules as 
    effective as the Federal procedures and rules. In particular, a State 
    plan must provide that employees be informed of their protections and 
    obligations under the Act. (See 29 CFR 1902.4(c)(2)(iv).) The plan also 
    must provide for prompt notice to employers and employees when an 
    alleged violation of standards has occurred, including the proposed 
    abatement requirements, by such means as the issuance and posting of 
    citations. (See 29 CFR 1902.4(c)(2)(x).) Since this final regulation 
    will improve Federal OSHA's enforcement of the OSH Act and, in 
    particular, will foster the abatement of violations and communication 
    to employees about their protections under the Act, State plans will be 
    required to adopt an identical regulation, or an equivalent regulation 
    that is at least as effective as the Federal regulation, within six 
    months of Federal promulgation. Thus, the final regulation complies 
    with Executive Order 12612 with respect to State Plan States because 
    (1) the final regulation deals with a problem of national scope, and 
    (2) the OSH Act requires that State Plan States adopt the OSHA 
    regulation or an equally-effective regulation. Since a number of State 
    Plan States already have abatement-verification and employee-
    notification procedures similar to the requirements specified under 
    this regulation, they will only need to reissue the requirement as an 
    enforceable regulation.
        State comments were invited on prepublication drafts of both the 
    proposed and final regulation, and these comments were fully considered 
    before a final regulation was promulgated. Two State Plan States, 
    Michigan and Minnesota, commented (Exs. 4-86 and 4-87, respectively) on 
    the draft proposed regulation. Michigan and Minnesota again submitted 
    comments on the draft final regulation, along with Maryland (Exs. 4-89, 
    4-90, and 4-91, respectively). These states expressed concern about the 
    tagging and posting requirements, the paperwork burden these 
    requirements impose on employers, and the use of additional state 
    resources to implement the regulation. Minnesota also wanted a number 
    of items clarified in the compliance guidance that OSHA will issue with 
    this regulation (e.g., the application of the tagging and reporting 
    requirements in contested cases). The final regulation has addressed 
    the States' concerns regarding the tagging and posting requirements, 
    and lessened the paperwork burden for both employers and the 
    enforcement agencies (i.e., OSHA and State Plan States). This reduced 
    paperwork burden, the compliance guidance that will accompany this 
    final regulation, and the economic benefits that will accrue to 
    enforcement agencies under the final regulation (see ``Economic 
    Analysis'' above) will reduce the burden to, and enhance the economic 
    resources of, the Federal and State agencies responsible for enforcing 
    the final regulation.
        OSHA also sought information from the State Plan States that 
    require abatement documents on their experience with employers 
    providing false information on the documents. On average, these states 
    reported a false-information rate of five per cent or less.
    
    X. State Plans
    
        Currently, 25 states and other jurisdictions have OSHA-approved 
    occupational safety and health plans. These 25 jurisdictions are: 
    Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, 
    Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Puerto 
    Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Virgin 
    Islands, Washington, and Wyoming; Connecticut and New York have State 
    Plan jurisdiction for state and local government employees only.
        The 25 jurisdictions with their own OSHA-approved occupational 
    safety and health plans are required to adopt a regulation on abatement 
    verification
    
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    and employee notification that is at least as effective as this Federal 
    regulation within six months of the publication date of the final 
    regulation.
        Current State abatement-verification and employee-notification 
    procedures are described in State field operations manuals and/or 
    directives. Although these state procedures may differ from the federal 
    procedures, the State Plan States, like Federal OSHA, generally lack 
    regulations or statutory provisions specifically addressing this issue, 
    and thus do not by regulation compel employers to submit abatement-
    certification letters or other documents to them; the exceptions are 
    Wyoming and California, which have a regulation and legislation, 
    respectively, that require employers to submit abatement-certification 
    documents be submitted to the state occupational safety and health 
    agencies.
        Existing State abatement-certification procedures are identical to 
    the current Federal practices except as described below:
        (1) The following nine States have abatement-certification forms: 
    Alaska, California, Kentucky, Michigan, North Carolina, Oregon, South 
    Carolina, Washington, and Wyoming. On these forms, employers describe 
    the specific actions taken to correct each alleged violation. Alaska, 
    Oregon, Washington, Michigan, and Kentucky also ask for documentary 
    evidence of abatement. Alaska requires employers to certify, under 
    penalty of perjury, that the violations were abated by the dates 
    specified.
        (2) For serious violations, California has adopted legislation that 
    requires an abatement statement to be signed under penalty of perjury.
        (3) Minnesota requests a progress report for all serious, and most 
    other, violations of the State's general industry and construction 
    standards.
        (4) Washington schedules follow-up inspections every six months to 
    assess progress made on lengthy or multi-step abatement plans.
        (5) Some states (e.g., South Carolina and California) send a 
    reminder letter to employers just before the abatement-certification 
    form is due. Washington reminds employers of this event by letter or 
    telephone. Kentucky and California also send follow-up letters if the 
    form is overdue.
        (6) Maryland tracks informal conference settlements to determine if 
    the abatement documentation is adequate.
        (7) Wyoming has an enforcement regulation requiring submission of 
    written documents stating the date abatement was accomplished. Failure 
    to do so can result in a civil penalty. Wyoming also can take legal 
    action to enforce submission of abatement letters.
        (8) New York, which covers only state and local government 
    employees, conducts follow-up inspections to validate abatement of 
    every violation; employers are not asked to send abatement-
    certification information to the state agency.
        A number of states have ``red-tag'' authority, which allows them to 
    issue a restraining order in an immediate-danger situation involving 
    hazardous equipment (or other condition or practice). This red tag 
    authority is different from the orange warning tag required by the 
    abatement verification and employee notification regulation; use of 
    orange warning tags does not prohibit operation of cited equipment, 
    while use of red tags does prohibit such operation.
    
    List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1903
    
        Abatement; Abatement certification; Abatement plan; Progress 
    reports; Abatement verification; Employee notification; Movable 
    equipment; Occupational safety and health; Posting; Tags.
    
     Authority
    
        This document was prepared under the direction of Gregory R. 
    Watchman, Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety 
    and Health, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Ave., N.W., 
    Washington, D.C. 20210. The final regulation is issued pursuant to 
    Sections 8(c)(1), 8(g), and 9(b) of the Occupational Safety and Health 
    Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 657, 658).
    
        Signed in Washington, D.C., this 19th day of March 1997.
    Gregory R. Watchman,
    Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor.
    
        Part 1903 of CFR 29 is hereby amended as set forth below.
    
     Regulatory Text
    
    PART 1903--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The authority citation for Part 1903 of Title 29 of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations is revised to read as follows:
    
        Authority: Sections 8 and 9 of the Occupational Safety and 
    Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 657, 658); 5 U.S.C. 553; Secretary of 
    Labor's Order No. 1-90 (55 FR 9033) or 6-96 (62 FR 111), as 
    applicable.
    
        2. 29 CFR Part 1903 is amended by redesignating Secs. 1903.19, 
    1903.20, and 1903.21 as Secs. 1903.20, 1903.21, and 1903.22, 
    respectively, and by adding a new Sec. 1903.19, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1903.19  Abatement verification.
    
        Purpose. OSHA's inspections are intended to result in the abatement 
    of violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (the 
    OSH Act). This section sets forth the procedures OSHA will use to 
    ensure abatement. These procedures are tailored to the nature of the 
    violation and the employer's abatement actions.
        (a) Scope and application. This section applies to employers who 
    receive a citation for a violation of the Occupational Safety and 
    Health Act.
        (b) Definitions. (1) Abatement means action by an employer to 
    comply with a cited standard or regulation or to eliminate a recognized 
    hazard identified by OSHA during an inspection.
        (2) Abatement date means:
        (i) For an uncontested citation item, the later of:
        (A) The date in the citation for abatement of the violation;
        (B) The date approved by OSHA or established in litigation as a 
    result of a petition for modification of the abatement date (PMA); or
        (C) The date established in a citation by an informal settlement 
    agreement.
        (ii) For a contested citation item for which the Occupational 
    Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC) has issued a final order 
    affirming the violation, the later of:
        (A) The date identified in the final order for abatement; or
        (B) The date computed by adding the period allowed in the citation 
    for abatement to the final order date;
        (C) The date established by a formal settlement agreement.
        (3) Affected employees means those employees who are exposed to the 
    hazard(s) identified as violation(s) in a citation.
        (4) Final order date means:
        (i) For an uncontested citation item, the fifteenth working day 
    after the employer's receipt of the citation;
        (ii) For a contested citation item:
        (A) The thirtieth day after the date on which a decision or order 
    of a commission administrative law judge has been docketed with the 
    commission, unless a member of the commission has directed review; or
        (B) Where review has been directed, the thirtieth day after the 
    date on which the Commission issues its decision or order disposing of 
    all or pertinent part of a case; or
        (C) The date on which a federal appeals court issues a decision 
    affirming the violation in a case in which a final order of OSHRC has 
    been stayed.
        (5) Movable equipment means a hand-held or non-hand-held machine or 
    device, powered or unpowered, that is
    
    [[Page 15338]]
    
    used to do work and is moved within or between worksites.
        (c) Abatement certification. (1) Within 10 calendar days after the 
    abatement date, the employer must certify to OSHA (the Agency) that 
    each cited violation has been abated, except as provided in paragraph 
    (c)(2) of this section.
        (2) The employer is not required to certify abatement if the OSHA 
    Compliance Officer, during the on-site portion of the inspection:
        (i) Observes, within 24 hours after a violation is identified, that 
    abatement has occurred; and
        (ii) Notes in the citation that abatement has occurred.
        (3) The employer's certification that abatement is complete must 
    include, for each cited violation, in addition to the information 
    required by paragraph (h) of this section, the date and method of 
    abatement and a statement that affected employees and their 
    representatives have been informed of the abatement.
    
        Note to paragraph (c): Appendix A contains a sample Abatement 
    Certification Letter.
    
        (d) Abatement documentation. (1) The employer must submit to the 
    Agency, along with the information on abatement certification required 
    by paragraph (c)(3) of this section, documents demonstrating that 
    abatement is complete for each willful or repeat violation and for any 
    serious violation for which the Agency indicates in the citation that 
    such abatement documentation is required.
        (2) Documents demonstrating that abatement is complete may include, 
    but are not limited to, evidence of the purchase or repair of 
    equipment, photographic or video evidence of abatement, or other 
    written records.
        (e) Abatement plans. (1) The Agency may require an employer to 
    submit an abatement plan for each cited violation (except an other-
    than-serious violation) when the time permitted for abatement is more 
    than 90 calendar days. If an abatement plan is required, the citation 
    must so indicate.
        (2) The employer must submit an abatement plan for each cited 
    violation within 25 calendar days from the final order date when the 
    citation indicates that such a plan is required. The abatement plan 
    must identify the violation and the steps to be taken to achieve 
    abatement, including a schedule for completing abatement and, where 
    necessary, how employees will be protected from exposure to the 
    violative condition in the interim until abatement is complete.
    
        Note to paragraph (e): Appendix B contains a Sample Abatement 
    Plan form.
    
        (f) Progress reports. (1) An employer who is required to submit an 
    abatement plan may also be required to submit periodic progress reports 
    for each cited violation. The citation must indicate:
        (i) That periodic progress reports are required and the citation 
    items for which they are required;
        (ii) The date on which an initial progress report must be 
    submitted, which may be no sooner than 30 calendar days after 
    submission of an abatement plan;
        (iii) Whether additional progress reports are required; and
        (iv) The date(s) on which additional progress reports must be 
    submitted.
        (2) For each violation, the progress report must identify, in a 
    single sentence if possible, the action taken to achieve abatement and 
    the date the action was taken.
    
        Note to paragraph (f): Appendix B contains a Sample Progress 
    Report Form.
    
        (g) Employee notification. (1) The employer must inform affected 
    employees and their representative(s) about abatement activities 
    covered by this section by posting a copy of each document submitted to 
    the Agency or a summary of the document near the place where the 
    violation occurred.
        (2) Where such posting does not effectively inform employees and 
    their representatives about abatement activities (for example, for 
    employers who have mobile work operations), the employer must:
        (i) Post each document or a summary of the document in a location 
    where it will be readily observable by affected employees and their 
    representatives; or
        (ii) Take other steps to communicate fully to affected employees 
    and their representatives about abatement activities.
        (3) The employer must inform employees and their representatives of 
    their right to examine and copy all abatement documents submitted to 
    the Agency.
        (i) An employee or an employee representative must submit a request 
    to examine and copy abatement documents within 3 working days of 
    receiving notice that the documents have been submitted.
        (ii) The employer must comply with an employee's or employee 
    representative's request to examine and copy abatement documents within 
    5 working days of receiving the request.
        (4) The employer must ensure that notice to employees and employee 
    representatives is provided at the same time or before the information 
    is provided to the Agency and that abatement documents are:
        (i) Not altered, defaced, or covered by other material; and
        (ii) Remain posted for three working days after submission to the 
    Agency.
        (h) Transmitting abatement documents. (1) The employer must 
    include, in each submission required by this section, the following 
    information:
        (i) The employer's name and address;
        (ii) The inspection number to which the submission relates;
        (iii) The citation and item numbers to which the submission 
    relates;
        (iv) A statement that the information submitted is accurate; and
        (v) The signature of the employer or the employer's authorized 
    representative.
        (2) The date of postmark is the date of submission for mailed 
    documents. For documents transmitted by other means, the date the 
    Agency receives the document is the date of submission.
        (i) Movable equipment. (1) For serious, repeat, and willful 
    violations involving movable equipment, the employer must attach a 
    warning tag or a copy of the citation to the operating controls or to 
    the cited component of equipment that is moved within the worksite or 
    between worksites.
    
        Note to paragraph (i)(1): Attaching a copy of the citation to 
    the equipment is deemed by OSHA to meet the tagging requirement of 
    paragraph (i)(1) of this section as well as the posting requirement 
    of 29 CFR 1903.16.
    
        (2) The employer must use a warning tag that properly warns 
    employees about the nature of the violation involving the equipment and 
    identifies the location of the citation issued.
    
        Note to paragraph (i)(2): Non-Mandatory Appendix C contains a 
    sample tag that employers may use to meet this requirement.
    
        (3) If the violation has not already been abated, a warning tag or 
    copy of the citation must be attached to the equipment:
        (i) For hand-held equipment, immediately after the employer 
    receives the citation; or
        (ii) For non-hand-held equipment, prior to moving the equipment 
    within or between worksites.
        (4) For the construction industry, a tag that is designed and used 
    in accordance with 29 CFR 1926.20(b)(3) and 29 CFR 1926.200(h) is 
    deemed by OSHA to meet the requirements of this section when the 
    information required by paragraph (i)(2) is included on the tag.
        (5) The employer must assure that the tag or copy of the citation 
    attached to movable equipment is not altered, defaced, or covered by 
    other material.
        (6) The employer must assure that the tag or copy of the citation 
    attached to
    
    [[Page 15339]]
    
    movable equipment remains attached until:
        (i) The violation has been abated and all abatement verification 
    documents required by this regulation have been submitted to the 
    Agency;
        (ii) The cited equipment has been permanently removed from service 
    or is no longer within the employer's control; or
        (iii) The Commission issues a final order vacating the citation.
    
    Appendices to Sec. 1903.19--Abatement Verification
    
        Note: Appendices A through C provide information and 
    nonmandatory guidelines to assist employers and employees in 
    complying with the appropriate requirements of this section.
    
    Appendix A to Section 1903.19--Sample Abatement-Certification Letter 
    (Nonmandatory)
    
    (Name), Area Director
    U. S. Department of Labor--OSHA
    Address of the Area Office (on the citation)
    
    [Company's Name]
    [Company's Address]
    
        The hazard referenced in Inspection Number [insert 9-digit #] 
    for violation identified as:
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on insert date 
    by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    ____________________.
    
    Citation [insert #] and item [insert #] was corrected on [insert 
    date] by:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    ____________________.
    
    I attest that the information contained in this document is 
    accurate.
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
        Signature
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
        Typed or Printed Name
    
    Appendix B to Section 1903.19--Sample Abatement Plan or Progress Report 
    (Nonmandatory)
    
    (Name), Area Director
    U. S. Department of Labor--OSHA
    Address of Area Office (on the citation)
    
    [Company's Name]
    [Company's Address]
    
    Check one:
        Abatement Plan  [  ]
        Progress Report  [  ]
    
    Inspection Number------------------------------------------------------
    
    Page ________ of ________
    Citation Number(s)*----------------------------------------------------
    Item Number(s)*--------------------------------------------------------
    
                                                                            
                                                      Proposed    Completion
                                                     Completion   Date (for 
                        Action                       Date (for     progress 
                                                     abatement     reports  
                                                    plans only)     only)   
                                                                            
    1.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                                            
    2.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                                            
    3.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                                            
    4.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                    ...........  ...........
    5.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                    ...........  ...........
    6.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                    ...........  ...........
    7.............................................  ...........  ...........
                                                                            
                                                                            
    
    Date required for final abatement:-------------------------------------
    I attest that the information contained in this document is 
    accurate.
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
        Signature
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
        Typed or Printed Name
    
    Name of primary point of contact for questions: [optional]
    Telephone number:------------------------------------------------------
    
        *Abatement plans or progress reports for more than one citation 
    item may be combined in a single abatement plan or progress report 
    if the abatement actions, proposed completion dates, and actual 
    completion dates (for progress reports only) are the same for each 
    of the citation items.
    
    BILLING CODE 4510-26-P
    
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    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR31MR97.016
    
    
    
    [FR Doc. 97-7959 Filed 3-28-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4510-26-C
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/30/1997
Published:
03/31/1997
Department:
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-7959
Dates:
This final rule is effective on May 30, 1997.
Pages:
15324-15340 (17 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. C-03
RINs:
1218-AB40: Abatement Verification (Hazard Correction)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/1218-AB40/abatement-verification-hazard-correction-
PDF File:
97-7959.pdf
CFR: (1)
29 CFR 1903.19